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IMDbPro

Inferno

Título original: Jigoku
  • 1960
  • Not Rated
  • 1 h 41 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,7/10
4,9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Inferno (1960)
Terror popularCrimeDramaHorrorSuspense

Um grupo de pecadores envolvidos em histórias interligadas de assassinato, vingança, engano e adultério se encontram nas portas do inferno.Um grupo de pecadores envolvidos em histórias interligadas de assassinato, vingança, engano e adultério se encontram nas portas do inferno.Um grupo de pecadores envolvidos em histórias interligadas de assassinato, vingança, engano e adultério se encontram nas portas do inferno.

  • Direção
    • Nobuo Nakagawa
  • Roteiristas
    • Nobuo Nakagawa
    • Ichirô Miyagawa
  • Artistas
    • Shigeru Amachi
    • Utako Mitsuya
    • Yôichi Numata
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,7/10
    4,9 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Nobuo Nakagawa
    • Roteiristas
      • Nobuo Nakagawa
      • Ichirô Miyagawa
    • Artistas
      • Shigeru Amachi
      • Utako Mitsuya
      • Yôichi Numata
    • 49Avaliações de usuários
    • 59Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos71

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    Elenco principal29

    Editar
    Shigeru Amachi
    Shigeru Amachi
    • Shirô Shimizu
    Utako Mitsuya
    • Yukiko…
    Yôichi Numata
    • Tamura
    Hiroshi Hayashi
    • Gôzô Shimizu
    Jun Ôtomo
    • Ensai Taniguchi
    Akiko Yamashita
    • Kinuko
    Kiyoko Tsuji
    Kiyoko Tsuji
    • Kyôichi's Mother
    Fumiko Miyata
    • Mrs. Yajima
    Akira Nakamura
    • Professor Yajima
    • (as Torahiko Nakamura)
    Kimie Tokudaiji
    • Ito Shimizu
    Akiko Ono
    • Yoko
    Tomohiko Ôtani
    • Dr. Kusama
    Kôichi Miya
    • Journalist Akagawa
    Sakutarô Yamakawa
    • Fisherman
    Rei Ishikawa
    • Old Man with Tatoo
    Hiroshi Shingûji
    • Detective Hariya
    Hiroshi Izumida
    • Kyôichi 'Tiger' Shiga
    Yôzô Takamura
    • Devil Torturers
    • Direção
      • Nobuo Nakagawa
    • Roteiristas
      • Nobuo Nakagawa
      • Ichirô Miyagawa
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários49

    6,74.8K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    7kevin_robbins

    This movie isn't perfect but it is well made, has some tremendous kills and does have a worthwhile ending

    Jigoku (1960) is a Japanese horror movie that I recently watched on YouTube. The storyline follows a group of people who have all done heinous sins and now meet at the gates of hell. They tell each other their backstories and then prepare to do the time for their acts.

    This movie is directed by Nobuo Nakagawa (The Living Koheiji) and stars Shigeru Amachi (The Ghost of Yotsuya), Kiyoko Tsuji (House), Utako Mitsuya (Evil Brain from Outer Space) and Yôichi Numata (Ringu).

    This is one of those movies with a slow burn and focuses initially on the characters, their backstories and present circumstances before things get really exciting, then the last 20 minutes are outstanding. The background music and sound effects are excellent and the director has good use of color to create intensity, especially at the end. This is one of those movies with great use of a fog machines from beginning to end. I will say the cinematography is inconsistent but the kill scenes at the end are awesome and there's a decapitation scene that makes this movie worth watching alone. The corpses are also very well done and the conclusion is worthwhile.

    Overall, this movie isn't perfect but it is well made, has some tremendous kills and does have a worthwhile ending. I would score this a 7/10 and recommend seeing it once.
    5rlcsljo

    Hell is equally life and afterlife

    This movie spends half of its time in the real world and half in the afterlife. During the first half you ask "where the hell is hell anyway?". After it goes to the "real" hell, you realize that hell is all the things that went undone in the mortal coil.

    You realize that if you don't want to live in hell later, don't live in "hell" now.

    A great psychedelic trip without psychedelic trappings.
    7Bunuel1976

    JIGOKU (Nobuo Nakagawa, 1960) ***

    Words can't aptly describe the assault on the senses that is JIGOKU but I'll try anyway: over-used phrases like fascinating, surreal, disturbing and unique instantly come to mind - but the film is all of these and more. By now, I have a fair number of strange Japanese films under my belt - but this one's something else entirely!

    From the stylized approach (shooting from odd angles and the occasional adoption of a greenish hue) to its plethora of arresting imagery (especially the gruesome body piercing - sword through neck, eye-gouging, feet stamping on huge needles, torso sawed in half, etc.), director/co-writer Nakagawa's vision of Hell is surely among the most visceral ever depicted on the screen. While its concept of establishing sections (or circles) of punishment for specific crimes goes all the way back to Dante Alighieri - though, as mentioned in the film itself, Buddhism has its own take on the subject - cinematically it anticipates the one seen in the Coffin Joe outing THIS NIGHT I'LL POSSESS YOUR CORPSE (1966). Still, with respect to both the microcosmic viewpoint of the plot and the film's vivid color scheme, it also reminded me of GOKE - BODY SNATCHER FROM HELL (1968), while its essential nihilism (I literally lost count of the number of people killed off during the first hour!) looks forward to BLIND BEAST (1969).

    The doppelganger element - in the DVD's main supplement, a 39-minute featurette, it's mentioned that the script was partly inspired by the Faust legend - heightens the film's already disquieting aura: Yoichi Numata as an emissary of Hell in human form (though he's not spared the painful retribution for his sins once the scene shifts to the netherworld) is especially effective; interestingly, the actor was disappointed by his own performance and admits now that he couldn't understand the role! However, I need to point out that - much like I had written of Ingmar Bergman's THE RITE (1969) - the plot reaches a level of implausible melodrama as to feel almost like a parody (even more so when considering the various characters' penchant for bursting into sentimental songs a' la the work of John Ford!).

    Anyway, while I found the DVD transfer somewhat dark, I'm glad to say that the copy I own is the 'Second Pressing' - this means that the problem concerning a 2-minute sequence, which previously got skipped when watching the disc on a DVD player, has now been fixed. Originally intended for Eclipse, Criterion's sub-label - back when it was supposed to release little-known genre/exploitation titles - I feel that the film is important enough to warrant its place in the official Collection.

    The bits from GHOST STORY OF YOTSUYA (1959) shown in the featurette were very intriguing and, hopefully, won't be too long in coming; still, I was equally itching to learn more about the various 'B' horror films by Nakagawa and production company Shintoho (which had actually started out by making such masterworks of World Cinema as Akira Kurosawa's STRAY DOG [1949] and Kenji Mizoguchi's THE LIFE OF OHARU [1952]!) whose posters form the extensive still gallery...

    Although I have to admit that I'd never heard of the film prior to Criterion's DVD announcement, Chuck Stephens - in his rather pretentious essay in the accompanying booklet (though he perceptively suggests that the pairing of the dead yakuza's mother and girlfriend may well have anticipated the deadly female relatives of ONIBABA [1964]) - believes that JIGOKU ought to be thought of in the same terms as such horror landmarks as EYES WITHOUT A FACE (1959), BLACK Sunday (1960), PEEPING TOM (1960) and PSYCHO (1960), films which collectively brought an unprecedented maturity to the genre. Needless to say, the film's greatest influence can be seen in the gore-drenched Asian exploitation cinema which survives to this day (interestingly enough, JIGOKU was itself remade twice over the years - in 1979 and 1999!).
    7gbill-74877

    Surreal, nightmarish, and campy

    Certainly not a film for everyone, 'Jigoku' combines visions of Dante, surreal art, nightmarish tortures, and of course, Japanese camp. Director Nobuo Nakagawa presents it all in a dark, dreamlike way, shocking us (mildly) with the death of characters in the first part of the movie, and ramping this up to really shocking us with his vision of the torments of hell. It's in these that the film is at its best. There are the scenes of gore which may have you cringing, but the truly memorable scenes are those which are artistic, such as the field of hands reaching up out of the ground, and the whirling torment of people circling in a frenzy. In Nakagawa's hell, there is both physical pain and mental anguish, as people endlessly seek loved ones or slog through rivers of pus and waste. Where the film is weaker is in providing reasons for why all of the characters end up in hell in the first place. While the initial setup of a hit and run accident is pretty tight, expanding this to a broader set of characters gets a little contrived. Through it all, the character of the dark and sociopathic friend is played well by Yôichi Numata, who stands out in the cast.
    7zetes

    Interesting, but I wish it were better

    The kind of film that sounds really exciting, and is interesting, but you wish it were a bit better than it is. Its reputation is based mostly on the final 40 minutes, where all the characters take a vacation to the bowels of Buddhist Hell (pretty much like Christian Hell, but with more lotus flowers). The first hour or so isn't much less hellish. A college student and his wicked friend mow down a drunk gangster in their car. The student, burdened with guilt (somewhat nonsensical guilt seeing as it wasn't his fault), starts seeing tragedy occur all around him. In just the next several days, all kinds of people with whom he associates die. It's never his fault, per se, but for some reason he always blames himself. That first hour is a little boring and a little confusing – I was wondering if the guy was supposed to already be in hell. The hell part is pretty cool, but also fairly silly. What always works in Jigoku is the cinematography and art direction. This is a damn cool looking movie. I wouldn't particularly recommend it, but it's worth seeing just for the cool parts.

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      The film's production company was going out of business while the film was being completed, leading to budget-saving tactics such as the actors helping dig their own holes in the movie's set for Hell. Critics kidded that this film killed the Shintoho Studio.
    • Erros de gravação
      While Shiro is on the rope bridge, we see him at various times hanging on to the side handrails. Between shots, without him having changed position, these handrails quite noticeably change in diameter from thin cables to a much thicker cable, indicating that some shots were filmed on a real bridge, others were filmed on a studio mock-up.
    • Citações

      Tamura: So you want to turn me in for manslaughter?

      Shiro Shimizu: We're the ones who killed him. We caused it. Let's go together. Please.

      Tamura: That might ease your conscience, but I'm not interested. It'd be stupid. He was drunk. He ran into the road. It was basically suicide. Besides, he was just some yakuza scum. He's not worth the best years of our lives.

    • Conexões
      Featured in Building the Inferno: Nobuo Nakagawa and the Making of 'Jigoku' (2006)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Comin' through the Rye
      (uncredited)

      Music: traditional

      Japanese lyrics: unknown

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes13

    • How long is The Sinners of Hell?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 30 de julho de 1960 (Japão)
    • País de origem
      • Japão
    • Idioma
      • Japonês
    • Também conhecido como
      • The Sinners of Hell
    • Locações de filme
      • Tóquio, Japão
    • Empresa de produção
      • Shintoho Film Distribution Committee
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 41 min(101 min)
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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